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Satellites on the Cheap

An anonymous reader writes "At a cost of just $50,000 - including plane tickets to the Alaska launch site - it was constructed using off-the-shelf parts not designed to withstand the rigors of space. Its life span was only expected to be a few months. Six students put together the satellite last year after a three-year research and design project made possible with a grant from Boeing Co. The Department of Defense (news - web sites) Space Test Program approved the project and put it on a launch list"" Beats doing the egg drop.

5 of 103 comments (clear)

  1. The article shows it... by nikolas · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...there`s no such thing as a free launch!

    Bruuuuhahahah...

  2. Don't we have enough junk in space? by swagr · · Score: 4, Funny

    Somewhere (maybe here) scientists predicted that with the vast ammount of crap zipping about up there, the right type of collision (say bewteen a chunk of solar panel and a sattelite) could cause a chain reaction that would destroy every sattelite in orbit, and make it impossible to launch more.

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  3. life span by Alien54 · · Score: 3, Funny
    ``If we get lucky with radiation, it could last three years,'' said Darrell Boden, a professor in the aerospace engineering department.

    Watch, it will be up there still working ten or twenty years from now when it finally falls into the atmosphere.

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    "It is a greater offense to steal men's labor, than their clothes"
  4. Re:cost fo getting it into geo-stationary orbit by Arimus · · Score: 2, Funny

    (At this risk of losing most of my karma)
    Given the time this task would consume we'd probably need to keep the cars and sell the wives/girlfriends.

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    --- Users are like bacteria -> Each one causing a thousand tiny crises until the host finally gives up and dies.
  5. In a related story.... by technopinion · · Score: 5, Funny

    A team of 4 students from Devry Technical Institute cobbled together a nuclear submarine using parts scavenged from the set of Junkyard Wars, and a $300 grant from Kmart. Said the leader of the project, "We expected this thing to immediately sink to the bottom and begin its cycle of ocean-killing, but amazingly enough, it went down at a 30-degree angle, taking almost 3 times longer to sink, and it looks like it might pollute the ocean for many more years than we expected. It's quite incredible!"

    This truly is a great day for amateur scientists.